首页> 美国卫生研究院文献>Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences >Does light pollution alter daylength? A test using light loggers on free-ranging European blackbirds (Turdus merula)
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Does light pollution alter daylength? A test using light loggers on free-ranging European blackbirds (Turdus merula)

机译:光污染会改变白天吗?使用光记录仪对自由放养的欧洲黑鸟(Turdus merula)进行的测试

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摘要

Artificial light at night is one of the most apparent environmental changes accompanying anthropogenic habitat change. The global increase in light pollution poses new challenges to wild species, but we still have limited understanding of the temporal and spatial pattern of exposure to light at night. In particular, it has been suggested by several studies that animals exposed to light pollution, such as songbirds, perceive a longer daylength compared with conspecifics living in natural darker areas, but direct tests of such a hypothesis are still lacking. Here, we use a combination of light loggers deployed on individual European blackbirds, as well as automated radio-telemetry, to examine whether urban birds are exposed to a longer daylength than forest counterparts. We first used activity data from forest birds to determine the level of light intensity which defines the onset and offset of daily activity in rural areas. We then used this value as threshold to calculate the subjective perceived daylength of both forest and urban blackbirds. In March, when reproductive growth occurs, urban birds were exposed on average to a 49-min longer subjective perceived daylength than forest ones, which corresponds to a 19-day difference in photoperiod at this time of the year. In the field, urban blackbirds reached reproductive maturity 19 day earlier than rural birds, suggesting that light pollution could be responsible of most of the variation in reproductive timing found between urban and rural dwellers. We conclude that light at night is the most relevant change in ambient light affecting biological rhythms in avian urban-dwellers, most likely via a modification of the perceived photoperiod.
机译:夜间人造光是伴随人为栖息地变化的最明显的环境变化之一。全球光污染的增加对野生物种提出了新的挑战,但我们对夜间光照的时间和空间格局的了解仍然有限。尤其是,一些研究表明,与生活在自然较暗区域的同种动物相比,受光污染的动物(例如鸣鸟)感知的昼夜更长,但仍缺乏对这种假说的直接检验。在这里,我们结合使用了部署在单个欧洲黑鸟上的光记录仪以及自动无线电遥测技术,来检查城市鸟类是否暴露于比森林鸟类更长的白天。我们首先使用森林鸟类的活动数据来确定光照强度,该强度定义了农村地区日常活动的发生和偏移。然后,我们使用该值作为阈值来计算森林和城市黑鸟的主观感知日长。在三月份,当繁殖繁殖发生时,城市鸟类的主观日照平均时间要比森林鸟类长49分钟,这对应于每年这个时候的光周期相差19天。在田间,城市黑鸟比农村鸟早19天达到生殖成熟,这表明光污染可能是造成城乡居民繁殖时间变化的主要原因。我们得出的结论是,夜间光线是影响禽类城市居民生物节律的环境光线中最相关的变化,很可能是通过改变感知的光周期来实现的。

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